my dad was a UNIX sysadmin. His assertion- at the time- that we’d be fine, did not live up the vast amounts of overtime he put in in during '99.
(To be clear it was never the then-modern systems, like windows ME, or '95 that were at problem. it was all the old-as fuck stuff… every major institution still uses. Like IRS’s COBOL database… that’s… still being…used.all of that stuff, they needed to patch to make it okay.)
my dad was a UNIX sysadmin. His assertion- at the time- that we’d be fine, did not live up the vast amounts of overtime he put in in during '99.
(To be clear it was never the then-modern systems, like windows ME, or '95 that were at problem. it was all the old-as fuck stuff… every major institution still uses. Like IRS’s COBOL database… that’s… still being…used.all of that stuff, they needed to patch to make it okay.)
Just wait until 2038. More overtime!
he just retired this year!
(so… uh… what happens in 2038?) (edit… I’ll worry about 2038 if we actually get to 2030.)
Unix time starts January 1st, 1970 and counts the number of seconds since then.
Right now it is 1718265480 (approximately).
That’s stored in a 32 bit signed integer. It hits max int in January of 2038.
UNIX epoch limit. Date goes back to 1970